A new study has revealed an unsettling truth about the citation metrics that are commonly used to gauge scientists' level of impact and influence in their respective fields of research.
Saturday, August 31, 2019
There is a Reason These Are the Most Cited Scientists
Maybe a citation count doesn't have the resolution needed to judge academic success.
Monday, August 19, 2019
The Novel as Journalism
Tom Wolfe is the great American novelist of the past 50 years. He was
a pioneer of the “nonfiction novel” but never one to follow the
crowd blindly. His Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test was the
nonfiction novel of the hippie movement. The Right Stuff (“What is
it, I wondered, that makes a man willing to sit on top of an enormous
Roman candle...and wait for someone to light the fuse?) was a little
more nonfiction and a little less novel.
He thought the world
needed a nonfiction novel about New York City and tried to write one.
Instead, a single scene expanded into Radical Chic and Mau-Mauing
the Flak Catchers. The great novel turned into fiction: The Bonfire of
the Vanities. It proved to be prophetic in two key scenes (that
is, the fiction became nonfiction after the writing). One of those became the iconic news story of 1980s NY, but had to be cut from the book, causing him to ruefully quote Malcolm Muggeridge,
We live in an age in which it is no longer possible to be funny. There is nothing you can imagine, no matter how ludicrous, that will not promptly be enacted before your very eyes, probably by someone well known.Wolfe reflects on the desire for new, specialized novels and shows why novels can do journalism better than journalism can.
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